Edmonton, Montreal and Toronto are the only Canadian cities among the 23 candidate host cities as the United Bid to host the 2026 World Cup prepares to officially submit the bid to FIFA.

If successful, Canada, the United States and Mexico would host the quadrennial tournament together.

Canada Soccer confirmed that in Edmonton, games would be played at Commonwealth Stadium, at Olympic Stadium in Montreal and at Toronto's BMO Field.

"The United Bid is honoured to present to FIFA a bid that symbolizes the collective efforts of our three countries and our 23 Candidate Host Cities that have the demonstrated history and ability to stage the newly expanded 2026 FIFA World Cup," Canada Soccer's Peter Montopoli said in a statement. "As stewards for the world's largest sporting event, our diverse and inclusive cultures will welcome all players, officials and fans in celebration of the game in North America and around the world. On behalf of Canada Soccer, we congratulate our three Candidate Host Cities for their inclusion in the Bid Book and thank them and the federal government for their unwavering support of the United Bid."

Vancouver, Chicago and Minneapolis, MN all announced their withdrawals from candidacy in the past 24 hours, citing issues with the bidding process.

Along with the three Canadian cities, Guadalajara, Mexico City and Monterrey are the Mexican entries, while the remaining American cities are Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Cincinnati, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville, New York/New Jersey, Orlando, Philadelphia, San Francisco Bay Area, Seattle and Washington, DC.

"Canada, Mexico, and the United States have joined together to deliver a United Bid that offers FIFA and its member associations the power of unity, the promise of certainty, and the potential of extraordinary opportunity," said John Kristick, the bid's executive director.  "We are confident that the combination of our 23 existing world-class stadiums, 150 existing elite training facilities, and our modern and interconnected transportation network can help FIFA to achieve new records for attendance and revenue, which will allow the entire global football community to improve and grow."

The bid committee projects more than 5.8 million tickets sold, generating over $2 billion in ticketing revenue.

Only Morocco is vying against the North American bid.

The winning bid will be announced on June 13.